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The Girl with the Needle

Original title: Pigen med nålen
  • 2024
  • Unrated
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
16K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,118
216
The Girl with the Needle (2024)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
99+ Photos
Period DramaCrimeDramaHistory

Copenhagen 1919: A young worker finds herself unemployed and pregnant. She meets Dagmar, who runs an underground adoption agency. A strong connection grows but her world shatters when she st... Read allCopenhagen 1919: A young worker finds herself unemployed and pregnant. She meets Dagmar, who runs an underground adoption agency. A strong connection grows but her world shatters when she stumbles on the shocking truth behind her work.Copenhagen 1919: A young worker finds herself unemployed and pregnant. She meets Dagmar, who runs an underground adoption agency. A strong connection grows but her world shatters when she stumbles on the shocking truth behind her work.

  • Director
    • Magnus von Horn
  • Writers
    • Magnus von Horn
    • Line Langebek Knudsen
  • Stars
    • Vic Carmen Sonne
    • Trine Dyrholm
    • Besir Zeciri
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,118
    216
    • Director
      • Magnus von Horn
    • Writers
      • Magnus von Horn
      • Line Langebek Knudsen
    • Stars
      • Vic Carmen Sonne
      • Trine Dyrholm
      • Besir Zeciri
    • 48User reviews
    • 102Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 34 wins & 28 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Official Trailer

    Photos118

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Vic Carmen Sonne
    Vic Carmen Sonne
    • Karoline
    Trine Dyrholm
    Trine Dyrholm
    • Dagmar
    Besir Zeciri
    Besir Zeciri
    • Peter
    Joachim Fjelstrup
    Joachim Fjelstrup
    • Jørgen
    Tessa Hoder
    Tessa Hoder
    • Frida
    Ava Knox Martin
    Ava Knox Martin
    • Erena
    Søren Sætter-Lassen
    Søren Sætter-Lassen
    • Ring Master
    Ari Alexander
    Ari Alexander
    • Svendsen
    Benedikte Hansen
    Benedikte Hansen
    • Jørgen's mother
    Thomas Kirk
    • Foreman
    Anna Tulestedt
    • Old landlady
    Per Thiim Thim
    Per Thiim Thim
    • Landlord Olaf Jensen
    Peter Secher Schmidt
    Peter Secher Schmidt
    • Prosecutor
    Cordelia Majgaard
    Cordelia Majgaard
    • Young Maid
    Tommy Wurtz Petersen
    • Foreman in Sugar Factury
    Liv Vilde Christensen
    • Girl with baby
    Lizzielou Corfixen
    • Frida's sister
    • (as Lizzielou Güldenløve Corfixen)
    Monika Kepka
    • Young Bath House Assistant
    • Director
      • Magnus von Horn
    • Writers
      • Magnus von Horn
      • Line Langebek Knudsen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    7.516.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10timmovoosa

    10/10

    When rating watched movies, i always feel like there's something could be done differently or better, so even for "very good" movies i give 9 star.

    This is my first 10 star rating. It's a perfect movie.

    It's quite difficult to describe it as the whole movie has so many layers. It was emotionally on the edge and nervewrecking, very painful to watch. Even when you start to see the faint ray of hope, it soon vanishes brutally. But that's how the life was after the WW1. Povetry and broken people.

    It was also visually gorgeous, eventhough there's nothing gorgeous in that movie.

    Highly recommended, but not for snowflakes.
    7ehsancinematic

    Ethical Dilemmas and Hypnotic Visuals: A Stunning Dark Tale of Motherhood and Class Struggles

    This movie has some of the scariest scenes I've seen in any film this year, even compared to the best horror movies of 2024. The first act feels like a darker, more chilling version of Anora. It starts with themes of survival and desperation, as a working-class woman in post-WWI Copenhagen finds an opportunity to change her social class. But the story evolves into something much deeper, diving into ethical dilemmas around motherhood, sacrifice, and the difficult choices women face when their options are limited.

    And yet, there's even more to unpack in this stunningly shot, expertly crafted period drama. It's about moral ambiguity, isolation, loneliness, societal stigmas, female agency, power dynamics, and the lingering impact of war. The only thing holding it back for me is how heavy-handed it gets with the subject of abortion, especially in the final speech, which felt a bit out of place.

    It hit me hard with bricks of sadness and empathy for the main character, thanks to Vic Carmen Sonne's incredible performance as the lead. Every other actor is equally impressive. The black-and-white cinematography is breathtaking, the music is hypnotic, and the overall production is top-notch. With all its dark and heavy themes, this movie is an absolute blast to watch. Highly recommended!
    8pinkmanboy

    Piercing Realities

    "The Girl with the Needle" doesn't ask for permission to make you uncomfortable. It barges in with a heavy, suffocating atmosphere, dragging out a cruel reality that, despite being set in the early 20th century, feels eerily relevant today. Magnus von Horn directs with surgical precision, avoiding cheap sentimentality but still maintaining a deeply human perspective on his protagonists. The result is an intense drama that carries the weight of the world in every frame-making it almost impossible to forget.

    Focusing the story on Karoline, played with raw vulnerability by Vic Carmen Sonne, is one of the film's smartest choices. Instead of zooming in directly on the infamous serial killer Dagmar Overbye, who terrorized Denmark in the aftermath of World War I, the movie follows the journey of this young woman who, with no options left, is pushed into an abyss of despair. Karoline is the embodiment of a brutal reality-a society that turns its back on poor women, judges without offering alternatives, and turns victims into accomplices in their own tragedies. Sonne delivers a hypnotic performance, full of nuances, letting her hopelessness seep through small gestures and silences that say more than any dialogue ever could.

    Von Horn builds the film with a heavy, claustrophobic visual style. Michael Dymek's cinematography is hauntingly beautiful, with a color palette that reinforces the oppressive atmosphere. Cold tones and heavy shadows dominate the screen, creating a constant sense of danger even in the most mundane scenes. The feeling of suffocation is relentless, with the camera often framing Karoline in ways that emphasize her vulnerability-whether in cramped rooms or the dark streets of a city that seems completely indifferent to her existence. The soundtrack is another key element in shaping this mood. The experimental sound design, filled with unsettling noises and an eerie electronic score that echoes Karoline's racing heartbeat, never lets the audience feel at ease.

    The film's pacing is deliberately slow, almost as if it wants to trap the audience in Karoline's despair. Scenes unfold gradually, making sure that every bad decision, every door slammed in her face, is felt with full impact. The introduction of Dagmar Overbye, played with an overwhelming presence by Trine Dyrholm, adds an extra layer of tension. Dyrholm's Dagmar is cold but never cartoonish. She doesn't need dramatic outbursts to convey the threat she poses. It's a restrained performance that creeps up on you, slowly revealing a figure that's almost hypnotic in her quiet cruelty. The film doesn't try to humanize her to the point of excusing her crimes, but it does suggest that the social conditions of the time were the perfect breeding ground for people like her-and that suggestion is what makes it all the more unsettling.

    That said, "The Girl with the Needle" is not an easy watch. Its relentless atmosphere can be exhausting, and the complete lack of breathing room amidst so much misery makes the experience almost unbearable at times. Von Horn offers no relief, not even in small doses, which might alienate viewers looking for some kind of catharsis or hope. But maybe that's the whole point-there's no room for romanticizing when the central theme is the systematic abandonment of vulnerable women. The film's brutality doesn't just lie in Dagmar's actions but in its depiction of a society that willingly ignores the problems it creates.

    There's something deeply unsettling about the way the film works with its visual metaphors. The images of disfigured faces, the play of light and shadow distorting Karoline's expression as her situation worsens-it all builds a sense that, in some way, every character is scarred, physically or emotionally, by the cruelty of life. The war scars of Jorgen (Joachim Fjelstrup), the lover who abandons her, serve as a literal reflection of the invisible wounds carried by women like Karoline.

    In the end, "The Girl with the Needle" is not an easy film to digest, but it's precisely this harshness that makes it so powerful. It's a work that fearlessly dives into the dark, unsettling depths of its story-no compromises, no redemptive endings. Von Horn delivers a film that disturbs and provokes, forcing the audience to confront uncomfortable truths about inequality, abandonment, and the never-ending vulnerability of women in extreme poverty. A film that, much like the needle in the title, pierces through the skin and keeps throbbing long after it's over.
    8babyjaguar

    The Girl With A Needle: A Mother's Grasp With Darkness

    Magnus Von Horn's powerful film inspired by true events, beautifully composed in black and white. This Danish-Polish-Swedish co-produced film demonstrate aesthetics definitely from couple of possibly sources from German expressionist to film noir genres.

    The story surrounds a young woman, Karoline (played by Victoria Carmen Sonne) who begins a new life in the city, coming from the surges of the World War era or "Great War". Her husband was considered a war casualty thus begins a new romance leading to a unexpected pregnancy.

    Not winning approval of the relationship with her wealthy lover's family, she in unknown depression figures to do away with the unborn. She befriends Dagmar (played by Trine Dryholm) and her daughter Erena, decides to continue to birthing a child for "adoption" option.

    This storyline with plot twists and tropes goes into complete darkness with murders, drug addition and human trafficking. It was inspired by 1921 serial killer, Dagmar Over by who murdered numerous infants. This film show try show, in some troublesome way in humanizing these crimes, letting the viewer debate on the killer's motivation.

    Brilliantly directed with top-tier performances by both Von Somme and Dryholm along with exceptional soundtrack, to create emotional and anticipation tension. It's monochromatic visual are such sights to view the gritty aspects of urban 1920s life, some much dramatic.

    Its visceral richness, presents an insight even to subcultures developing at the time from circuses and their side show, showing the "freaks" of nature. It challenges the intimacy of motherhood, somehow showing it underbelly of darkness.

    Van Horn's handling of actual event information into a fictional account is truly astonishing, great detail paid to the era's tradition and domestic customs. This film is being marketed as a psychological horror film but it's more of an emotional portrait of human conflict, sparked by a gender political discourse.
    8frumalens

    Black and White, and Raw to the Bone

    "Inspired by true events." Four words that will knock the wind out of your lungs as the film fades to black.

    In the dirt and smog of 1919 Copenhagen emerges this atmospheric, haunting portrait of one woman's descent into the grim reality of impoverished motherhood.

    In the age of short attention spans that are worringly shortening, von Horn's dark film may be a little slow for the average modern movie goer. But for those who can engage with it, what awaits is a black and white cinematic feast with imagery reminiscent of silent movies that is both a treat for the eyes and a dagger to the heart.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Official submission of Denmark for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 97th Academy Awards in 2025.
    • Quotes

      Dagmar: The world is a horrible place. But we need to believe it's not so.

    • Connections
      Featured in 82nd Golden Globe Awards (2025)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 24, 2025 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Denmark
      • Poland
      • Sweden
      • France
      • Belgium
    • Language
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • Cô Gái và Cây Kim
    • Filming locations
      • Klodzko, Dolnoslaskie, Poland
    • Production companies
      • Nordisk Film Production
      • Creative Alliance
      • Lava Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $112,199
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,284
      • Dec 8, 2024
    • Gross worldwide
      • $531,301
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 3m(123 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.44 : 1

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